You cannot select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
mailu/docs/reverse.rst

231 lines
9.3 KiB
ReStructuredText

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters!

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters that may be confused with others in your current locale. If your use case is intentional and legitimate, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to highlight these characters.

Using an external reverse proxy
===============================
One of Mailu use cases is as part of a larger services platform, where maybe other Web services are available than Mailu Webmail and admin interface.
In such a configuration, one would usually run a frontend reverse proxy to serve all Web contents based on criteria like the requested hostname (virtual hosts) and/or the requested path. Mailu Web frontend is disabled in the default setup for security reasons, it is however expected that most users will enable it at some point. Also, due to Docker Compose configuration structure, it is impossible for us to make disabling the Web frontend completely available through a configuration variable. This guide was written to help users setup such an architecture.
There are basically three options, from the most to the least recommended one:
- have Mailu Web frontend listen locally and use your own Web frontend on top of it
- use ``Traefik`` in another container as central system-reverse-proxy
- override Mailu Web frontend configuration
- disable Mailu Web frontend completely and use your own
All options will require that you modify the ``docker-compose.yml`` file.
Have Mailu Web frontend listen locally
--------------------------------------
The simplest and safest option is to modify the port forwards for Mailu Web frontend and have your own frontend point there. For instance, in the ``front`` section of Mailu ``docker-compose.yml``, use local ports 8080 and 8443 respectively for HTTP and HTTPS:
.. code-block:: yaml
front:
# build: nginx
image: mailu/nginx:$VERSION
restart: always
env_file: .env
ports:
- "127.0.0.1:8080:80"
- "127.0.0.1:8443:443"
...
volumes:
- "$ROOT/certs:/certs"
Then on your own frontend, point to these local ports. In practice, you only need to point to the HTTPS port (as the HTTP port simply redirects there). Here is an example Nginx configuration:
.. code-block:: nginx
server {
listen 443;
server_name mymailhost.tld;
# [...] here goes your standard configuration
location / {
proxy_pass https://localhost:8443;
}
}
Because the admin interface is served as ``/admin`` and the Webmail as ``/webmail`` you may also want to use a single virtual host and serve other applications (still Nginx):
.. code-block:: nginx
server {
# [...] here goes your standard configuration
location /webmail {
proxy_pass https://localhost:8443/webmail;
}
location /admin {
proxy_pass https://localhost:8443/admin;
proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
}
location /main_app {
proxy_pass https://some-host;
}
location /other_app {
proxy_pass https://some-other-host;
}
location /local_app {
root /path/to/your/files;
}
location / {
return 301 $scheme://$host/main_app;
}
}
Finally, you might want to serve the admin interface on a separate virtual host but not expose the admin container directly (have your own HTTPS virtual hosts on top of Mailu, one public for the Webmail and one internal for administration for instance).
Here is an example configuration :
.. code-block:: nginx
server {
listen <public_ip>:443;
server_name yourpublicname.tld;
# [...] here goes your standard configuration
location /webmail {
proxy_pass https://localhost:8443/webmail;
}
}
server {
listen <internal_ip>:443;
server_name yourinternalname.tld;
# [...] here goes your standard configuration
location /admin {
proxy_pass https://localhost:8443/admin;
proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
}
}
Depending on how you access the front server, you might want to add a ``proxy_redirect`` directive to your ``location`` blocks:
.. code-block:: nginx
proxy_redirect https://localhost https://your-domain.com;
This will stop redirects (301 and 302) sent by the Webmail, nginx front and admin interface from sending you to ``localhost``.
.. _traefik_proxy:
Traefik as reverse proxy
------------------------
`Traefik`_ is a popular reverse-proxy aimed at containerized systems.
As such, many may wish to integrate Mailu into a system which already uses Traefik as its sole ingress/reverse-proxy.
As the ``mailu/front`` container uses Nginx not only for ``HTTP`` forwarding, but also for the mail-protocols like ``SMTP``, ``IMAP``, etc, we need to keep this
container around even when using another ``HTTP`` reverse-proxy. Furthermore, Traefik is neither able to forward non-HTTP, nor can it easily forward HTTPS-to-HTTPS.
This, however, means 3 things:
- ``mailu/front`` needs to listen internally on ``HTTP`` rather than ``HTTPS``
- ``mailu/front`` is not exposed to the outside world on ``HTTP``
- ``mailu/front`` still needs ``SSL`` certificates (here, we assume ``letsencrypt``) for a well-behaved mail service
This makes the setup with Traefik a bit harder: Traefik saves its certificates in a proprietary *JSON* file, which is not readable by Nginx in the ``front``-container.
To solve this, your ``acme.json`` needs to be exposed to the host or a ``docker-volume``. It will then be read by a script in another container,
which will dump the certificates as ``PEM`` files, readable for Nginx. The ``front`` container will automatically reload Nginx whenever these certificates change.
To set this up, first set ``TLS_FLAVOR=mail`` in your ``.env``. This tells ``mailu/front`` not to try to request certificates using ``letsencrypt``,
but to read provided certificates, and use them only for mail-protocols, not for ``HTTP``.
Next, in your ``docker-compose.yml``, comment out the ``port`` lines of the ``front`` section for port ``…:80`` and ``…:443``.
Add the respective Traefik labels for your domain/configuration, like
.. code-block:: yaml
labels:
- "traefik.enable=true"
- "traefik.port=80"
- "traefik.frontend.rule=Host:$TRAEFIK_DOMAIN"
.. note:: Please dont forget to add ``TRAEFIK_DOMAIN=[...]`` TO YOUR ``.env``
If your Traefik is configured to automatically request certificates from *letsencrypt*, then youll have a certificate for ``mail.your.doma.in`` now. However,
``mail.your.doma.in`` might only be the location where you want the Mailu web-interfaces to live — your mail should be sent/received from ``your.doma.in``,
and this is the ``DOMAIN`` in your ``.env``?
To support that use-case, Traefik can request ``SANs`` for your domain. Lets add something like
.. code-block:: yaml
[acme]
[[acme.domains]]
main = "your.doma.in" # this is the same as $TRAEFIK_DOMAIN!
sans = ["mail.your.doma.in", "webmail.your.doma.in", "smtp.your.doma.in"]
to your ``traefik.toml``. You might need to clear your ``acme.json``, if a certificate for one of these domains already exists.
You will need some solution which dumps the certificates in ``acme.json``, so you can include them in the ``mailu/front`` container.
One such example is ``mailu/traefik-certdumper``, which has been adapted for use in Mailu. You can add it to your ``docker-compose.yml`` like:
.. code-block:: yaml
certdumper:
restart: always
image: mailu/traefik-certdumper:$VERSION
environment:
# Make sure this is the same as the main=-domain in traefik.toml
# !!! Also dont forget to add "TRAEFIK_DOMAIN=[...]" to your .env!
- DOMAIN=$TRAEFIK_DOMAIN
volumes:
# Folder, which contains the acme.json
- "/data/traefik:/traefik"
# Folder, where cert.pem and key.pem will be written
- "/data/mailu/certs:/output"
Assuming you have ``volume-mounted`` your ``acme.json`` put to ``/data/traefik`` on your host. The dumper will then write out ``/data/mailu/certs/cert.pem`` and ``/data/mailu/certs/key.pem`` whenever ``acme.json`` is updated.
Yay! Now lets mount this to our ``front`` container like:
.. code-block:: yaml
volumes:
- /data/mailu/certs:/certs
This works, because we set ``TLS_FLAVOR=mail``, which picks up the key-certificate pair (e.g., ``cert.pem`` and ``key.pem``) from the certs folder in the root path (``/certs/``).
.. _`Traefik`: https://traefik.io/
Override Mailu configuration
----------------------------
If you do not have the resources for running a separate reverse proxy, you could override Mailu reverse proxy configuration by using a Docker volume.
Simply store your configuration file (Nginx format), in ``/mailu/nginx.conf`` for instance.
Then modify your ``docker-compose.yml`` file and change the ``front`` section to add a mount:
.. code-block:: nginx
front:
build: nginx
image: mailu/nginx:$VERSION
restart: always
env_file: .env
ports:
[...]
volumes:
- "$ROOT/certs:/certs"
- "$ROOT/nginx.conf:/etc/nginx/nginx.conf"
You can also download the example configuration files:
- :download:`compose/traefik/docker-compose.yml`
- :download:`compose/traefik/traefik.toml`
Disable completely Mailu reverse proxy
--------------------------------------
You can simply disable Mailu reverse proxy by removing the ``front`` section from the ``docker-compose.yml`` and use your own means to reverse proxy requests to the proper containers.
Be careful with this method as resolving container addresses outside the Docker Compose structure is a tricky task: there is no guarantee that addresses will remain after a restart and you are almost certain that addresses will change after every upgrade (and whenever containers are recreated).